Matt Stone Net Worth

Matt Stone Net Worth is$350 Million

Matt Stone Bio/Wiki, Net Worth, Married 2018

It’s been asserted that Matt Stone net worth reaches 300 million dollars. He’s rolled up his net worth through a number of occupations including performing, movie producing and directing, writing, screenwriting, television producing and directing and a lot more occupations associated with cinema business. Therefore, his participation into film and television business is the primary source of Matt Stone net worth.

Produced in 1971, Matt Stone is also called a voice actor who voiced various animated characters. Moreover, he’s also called an animator. The most famous creation that the animator is well known to people is the TV animated series called “South Park” which he developed jointly with his buddy Trey Parker. “South Park” is known globally and brought lots of monetary success to both of its originators. The initial show of it were released in 1992.

When the of them completed it, Matt Stone enrolled to study in the University of Colorado where he graduated in film and math and was the very first pupil to do this.

After that Matt Stone jointly with Trey Parker created another brief animated series called “Jesus Vs Santa” which gave the start to the development of “South Park”. The TV series “South Park” happen to be aired for over fifteen years and happen to be adored all around the world. Although these series are animated, the target audience of the of its creators isn’t kids but grown ups.

The show received favorable remarks as well as the couple was requested to make more animated series. The couple had two options. More animated either may have created a sequel to formerly made “Jesus Vs Frosty” or to make new show in regards to a brand new character named Mr. Hankey. Nevertheless, they chose to make a show about four sons which resulted in the development of “South Park”. The TV show began to air in the Comedy Central station also it added lots of sales to the total sum of Matt Stone net worth.

Grammy Award for Best Musical Theater Album, Tony Award for Best Book of a Musical, Primetime Emmy Award for Outstanding Animated Program, Tony Award for Best Original Score, Laurence Olivier Award for Best New Musical, Drama Desk Award for Outstanding Musical, Drama Desk Award for Outstanding Music...

Music Groups

DVDA

Nominations

Primetime Emmy Award for Outstanding Character Voice-Over Performance, Drama Desk Award for Outstanding Book of a Musical, Academy of Canadian Cinema and Television Award for Best Comedy Series

Movies

Electric Apricot: Quest for Festeroo, Team America: World Police, South Park: Bigger, Longer & Uncut, BASEketball, Your Studio and You, Cannibal! The Musical, The Spirit of Christmas, The Book of Mormon, Toofy Shorts: Vol. 1, For Goodness Sake II

It's the business of movies, it's the fights that go along with the level of budget, and more than anything, it's the creative constipation of having to live with one idea for two or three years. It's just not that fun.

2

Once you get yourselves into things that are working on a deeper level, you just have to keep going. When you reach that deeper level, you can't go back.

3

So a lot of our shows where even we think we've taken a very deliberate stand, liberals say, 'That's awesome, you took on the conservatives' same show and conservatives say 'That's awesome, you took on liberals.'

4

The culture is just so coarse that you have to take it to that level and people will be like, 'Whoa!' And then you can make people think about stuff. It's kind of like shock therapy.

5

We don't feel pressure of, 'Let's make this really raunchy.' It's more about making a good story, which is 10 times harder. The raunchy stuff's really easy for us.

6

You can make fun of everything.

7

And there's a visceral fun in watching Team America and making it, like taking a puppet and throwing it against the wall. Because it's not CG, there's something funny about it.

8

I just hate that Lucas... and it is not just Lucas, because everybody does it, where, boom, they get it out, and then there's a special edition for a movie that doesn't deserve a special edition.

9

I would never want the show to be a Democrat show or Republican show, because for us the show's more important than that. It isn't for everybody else in the world, but it is for us.

10

It is like football with coaches, like, 'We're only going to think about the next game.' It is really true, all you think is, 'Okay, we have to make a good next episode.'

11

We were the only ones interested in comedy. Everybody else wanted to be Martin Scorsese.

12

We're kind of like the smoking section in high school. We're immature, keep to ourselves.

13

We've been around long enough and have been to enough award shows to know that it is easy to lose to Phil Collins at any time.

14

We've rewritten entire scenes and had them animated twelve hours before the show goes on the air. It's not fun.

15

With religion I was always like, 'Does it matter if it's true if it makes you happy?'

16

That decision to commit your life to certain principles and a certain narrative, if I wrote a paper on that, I know I'd find inconsistencies.

17

The pride of the hipster food movement is sort of annoying, but it fascinates me.

18

There are good characters and bad characters.

19

There's something uniquely aggravating about the smugness of liberal Hollywood.

20

We are entertainers. We're trying to entertain people.

21

I'm a producer... I am a Hollywood producer. That is so weird. And it's not lame. But it's just like, how did that happen?

22

I've been to China and Russia, and I don't know anything about Chinese or Soviet relations.

23

In our show, there's usually a comeuppance. Or, if not, it's an anti-ending. And you're supposed to get that.

24

Ripping on Republicans is not that fun for us only because everyone else does it.

25

Sometimes I wish I could get fired.

26

I definitely think we get a lot of respect for what we do, but I definitely think that some people don't like us, which is fine.

27

I just get my news from the Internet.

28

I may have my personal political thing, but we never wanted it to stain the show.

29

I went to a couple Academy Awards parties and I was definitely like, 'Whoa, no one will talk to me.'

30

I would vote for a Mormon.

31

I'm concerned about people being happy.

32

I think the neoatheists have set atheism back a few decades. And I'm a self-described atheist.

33

At this point, we've ripped on everyone.

34

Do goofy stories make people nice? What if, in their goofiness, these stories somehow inspire that in the right way. Is that a social good?

35

Even celebrities, most people have a sense of humor. Most of the people we meet who we've done on the show, like it.

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Fact

1

He and Trey Parker admit that they both hate the first 3 seasons of South Park. They said that they were embarrassing to watch.